Vitamin D Intake Calculator

Use this Vitamin D Intake Calculator to estimate how much vitamin D you get each day from food, supplements, and sunlight, then compare that total to the Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA) for your age. Educational reference only, not a medical diagnosis.

Vitamin D Intake Calculator

Estimate daily vitamin D from food, supplements & sun

Sex:
Unit:
Step 1: Age & Status
years
Enter completed years. For infants under 1, enter 0.
Shown for women 14–50. Same RDA, but adequacy is critical.
Step 2: Sun Exposure
Sun contribution is an estimate. Skin tone, latitude, season, and sunscreen all affect actual synthesis.
Step 3: Food Sources (typical daily servings)
3 oz / day
~570 IU per 3 oz cooked.
3 oz / day
~40–45 IU per 3 oz.
cups / day
~120 IU per 8 fl oz cup.
6 oz / day
~80 IU per 6 oz, if fortified.
servings/day
~80 IU per serving (varies).
cups / day
~100 IU per cup, if fortified.
yolks / day
~44 IU per large yolk.
½ cup/day
~360 IU per ½ cup if UV-treated.
Step 4: Supplement (Optional)
IU / day
Check the label on your supplement (1 mcg = 40 IU).
Estimated Daily Intake
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Your RDA
--
--
0%
0% of RDA
100%+
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Intake Breakdown
From food0 IU
From supplement0 IU
Estimated from sun0 IU
Total daily intake0 IU
Important: Educational use only. Vitamin D needs vary by skin tone, latitude, body weight, and certain medical conditions. Talk to a doctor before taking high-dose supplements — a blood test (25-hydroxyvitamin D) is the only reliable way to confirm your status.

Why Vitamin D Matters

Vitamin D is unusual among vitamins because your body can make it from sunlight. It plays a central role in absorbing calcium and phosphorus, building strong bones and teeth, supporting immune function, and helping muscles contract properly. For children and teens, getting enough vitamin D is especially important during peak growth years because it works hand-in-hand with calcium to harden the skeleton.

Deficiency remains common. People at high latitudes, those who spend most of their time indoors, wear concealing clothing, have darker skin, or follow strict vegan diets are at higher risk. With small diet changes, sensible sun exposure, and an inexpensive supplement when needed, almost everyone can reach a healthy intake.

How This Calculator Works

1

Enter age & status

Age determines your RDA. Pregnancy/lactation does not change the RDA but is asked because adequacy is critical at these stages.

2

Pick a sun-exposure level

The tool estimates the IU your skin synthesizes per day. Skin tone, season, latitude, and sunscreen all influence the real value.

3

Log food servings

Enter daily servings of fatty fish, fortified milk, eggs, mushrooms, and other vitamin D foods. The calculator multiplies each by its IU value.

4

Add supplements

Add the IU on your supplement label (1 mcg = 40 IU). The tool sums food, sun, and supplement, then compares to your RDA.

Vitamin D Recommended Daily Intake (RDA)

Values below come from the Dietary Reference Intakes set by the U.S. National Academy of Medicine (IOM), which assume minimal sun exposure. Use them as a floor of healthy intake, not a ceiling.

Age GroupRDAUpper Limit
Infants 0–6 months400 IU (10 mcg)*1,000 IU
Infants 7–12 months400 IU (10 mcg)*1,500 IU
Children 1–3 years600 IU (15 mcg)2,500 IU
Children 4–8 years600 IU (15 mcg)3,000 IU
Ages 9–70 years600 IU (15 mcg)4,000 IU
Adults 71+ years800 IU (20 mcg)4,000 IU
Pregnant or lactating600 IU (15 mcg)4,000 IU

*For infants, the value is an Adequate Intake (AI) rather than an RDA. The Upper Limit is the maximum daily intake unlikely to cause harm — not a target.

Top Food Sources of Vitamin D

Few foods are naturally rich in vitamin D. Fortified products and fatty fish do most of the heavy lifting. Approximate IU per serving:

Cod liver oil (1 tbsp)1,360 IU
Rainbow trout, cooked (3 oz)645 IU
Salmon, cooked (3 oz)570 IU
White mushrooms, UV (½ cup)366 IU
Fortified milk (1 cup)120 IU
Fortified soy/almond milk (1 cup)100–120 IU
Fortified orange juice (1 cup)100 IU
Fortified yogurt (6 oz)80 IU
Fortified cereal (1 serving)80 IU
Sardines, canned (2 fish)46 IU
Large egg yolk44 IU
Light tuna, canned (3 oz)40 IU

Sun Exposure & Vitamin D

When ultraviolet B (UVB) rays hit bare skin, cholesterol in skin cells is converted into pre-vitamin D3, which the body activates in the liver and kidneys. Short, regular exposure of arms and face — about 10 to 30 minutes a few times per week — is usually enough for a fair-skinned adult during summer.

Sun synthesis is unreliable, though. Darker skin needs much longer exposure for the same result. Latitudes above 37° (northern U.S., Canada, much of Europe) get little usable UVB from October through March. SPF 30 sunscreen blocks more than 95% of UVB — protective against skin cancer, but it also reduces vitamin D synthesis. Rely on food and supplements as a baseline and treat sun as a bonus.

Signs of Possible Vitamin D Deficiency

Deficiency often develops silently. Persistent low levels may show up as:

Frequent bone pain or muscle aches
Fatigue, low energy, or low mood
Slow-healing or stress fractures
Muscle weakness, especially in legs/hips
Frequent colds or infections
In children: delayed growth or bowed legs (rickets)

These signs are not specific to vitamin D. If symptoms persist, ask your doctor for a 25-hydroxyvitamin D blood test — the only definitive way to measure your status.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between IU and mcg?

Both are units on supplement labels. The conversion is 1 mcg = 40 IU. So 600 IU equals 15 mcg, and a 2,000 IU supplement provides 50 mcg.

Can I get all my vitamin D from sunlight alone?

It depends on where you live, skin tone, and season. At northern latitudes during winter, or if you work indoors, dietary and supplemental sources are usually needed. Relying on intense sun also raises skin cancer risk.

Vitamin D2 vs D3 — which is better?

Both raise blood levels, but vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol) is generally more effective at maintaining 25(OH)D than D2 (ergocalciferol). D3 is the form your skin makes from sunlight and is found in most OTC supplements.

Can you take too much vitamin D?

Yes. Daily intakes above the Upper Limit (4,000 IU for ages 9+) over long periods can cause hypercalcemia — high blood calcium that may damage the kidneys and heart. Do not exceed the UL without medical supervision.

Does this calculator replace a blood test?

No. It estimates daily intake but cannot measure actual blood levels. If you have symptoms of deficiency or take high-dose supplements, ask your doctor for a 25(OH)D test.

Hello everyone, I'm Dr. Lily, a medical expert specializing in height enhancement with years of research experience and practical application of height-increasing methods, yielding promising results. I've launched a height growth blog as a personal platform to share knowledge and experiences gained throughout my journey of height improvement.

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